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Compulsory military service
Answer for the clue "Compulsory military service ", 12 letters:
conscription
Alternative clues for the word conscription
Word definitions for conscription in dictionaries
Wiktionary
Word definitions in Wiktionary
n. 1 involuntary labor, especially military service, demanded by some established authority 2 An enrolling or registering.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Conscription \Con*scrip"tion\, n. [L. conscriptio: cf. F. conscription.] An enrolling or registering. The conscription of men of war. --Bp. Burnet. A compulsory enrollment of men for military or naval service; a draft.
WordNet
Word definitions in WordNet
n. compulsory military service [syn: muster , draft , selective service ]
Wikipedia
Word definitions in Wikipedia
Conscription , or drafting , is the compulsory enlistment of people in a national service , most often a military service . Conscription dates back to antiquity and continues in some countries to the present day under various names. The modern system of ...
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
Word definitions in Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
noun COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS ■ ADJECTIVE military ▪ He suffered discredit by opposing, and then capitulating to, the campaign for military conscription . ▪ In April 1939, under pressure from Tory backbenchers, the Government announced the introduction ...
Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
Word definitions in Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
late 14c., "a putting in writing," from Middle French conscription , from Latin conscriptionem (nominative conscriptio ) "a drawing up of a list, enrollment, a levying of soldiers," from conscribere "to enroll," from com- "with" (see com- ) + scribere "to ...
Usage examples of conscription.
A Sinn Fein rally in Dublin drew men and women from the entire spectrum of nationalism to hear conscription condemned as a declaration of war on the Irish people.
It is the chronicler Newburgh who, in describing the conscription of property, cites the prophet Joel.
It has not been announced or decided in any form by the Provost-Marshal-General, or any one else in authority of the Government, that every citizen who has paid his three hundred dollars commutation is liable to be immediately drafted again, or that towns that have just raised the money to pay their quotas will have again to be subject to similar taxation or suffer the operations of the new conscription, nor it is probable that the like of them ever will be announced or decided.
I were of conscription age and had no dependents and were drafted, I would refuse to serve.
He had butchered Roehm and the SA on a Saturday, he had reintroduced conscription on a Saturday, he had retaken the Rhineland on a Saturday.
Over the intersection where Gordie Wiser had burned the Union Jack after many others had trampled and spit on it the day Ernest Bevin announced his Palestine policy, past the house where the Boy Wonder had been born, stopping to mark time at the corner where their fathers and elder brothers, armed with baseball bats, had fought the Frogs during the conscription riots, the boys came marching.
Manpower resources remained extremely tight The employment of free citizen women in the increasing number of clerical and administrative posts followed, as did peacetime conscription and the raising of the first Janissary legions.
Militia Act of 1792 establishes peacetime conscription and reserve service to age 60.
Women declared liable for peacetime conscription for noncombatant and second-line tasks in Domination.
That very night the conscription descended upon Mahommed Selim, and by sunrise he was standing in front of the house of the Mamour with twelve others, to begin the march to Dongola.
For Fatima thought of the far-off time when she loved Hassan the potter, who had been dragged from his wheel by a kavass of conscription and lost among the sands of the Libyan desert.
It suggested that other slavery, which did not hide itself under the forms of conscription and corvee.
Nolan had started on the Irish question, and Rodney baited him with the prospect of conscription there.
Old Terry Mackenzie had been there one night, and he had asserted not only that war was coming, but that we would be driven to conscription to raise an army.
After a month's debate the conscription law was about to be passed, made certain by the frank statement of the British Commission under Balfour as to the urgency of the need of a vast new army in France.